It’s that time of year again to make some New Year’s Resolutions. Unfortunately, many people find that just a few weeks into the New Year, their resolutions have fallen by the wayside. For example, making the resolution, “I want to exercise more” is a good resolution, but it’s too vague. It needs to be accompanied by a plan with bite-sized steps. Similarly, maybe you’ve made a resolution that goes something like this: “I want to read my Bible more next year.” Like the example of exercising, this is a good goal to have. It just needs to be made more specific to include a plan with actionable steps. And this is where a Bible reading plan becomes useful. A Bible reading plan takes your overall goal (“reading my Bible more”) and breaks that down into a series of steps that you can do. Without a Bible reading plan, you might not be sure where to begin and it would be easy to get bogged down in some of the Old Testament passages that are full of hard-to-pronounce names. But a Bible reading plan gives you the structure and accountability needed to accomplish your goal.
So whether this is your first time reading through the entire Bible or you already have a habit of Bible reading, I’m challenging you to commit to the Bible reading plan for 2025 that I have posted here on our website. I’m going to commit to following this reading plan in 2025 and I hope you will too. The plan is very manageable. It is 4 chapters per day most days (some days it is 5). In one year, you will read all the Old Testament more than once (you will read the Psalms and Proverbs twice) and you will read all the New Testament more than once (you will read the entire New Testament by September and then actually spend the last three months of the year rereading some New Testament books).
God promises us that his word is powerful and will accomplish what he intends it to accomplish. “For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword… discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart” (Heb. 4:12). “My word… shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose, and shall succeed in the thing for which I sent it” (Isaiah 55:11). When we are regularly reading and thinking about the word of God, it will change us. He will use his word to make us more like Jesus. So, whether you are already in the habit of Bible reading or whether you don’t have a Bible reading plan yet, I challenge you to join me in 2025 in committing to this Bible reading plan and seeing how God will use it to grow our relationship with him.